Antwerp — Mediar Therapeutics (Cambridge, MA, USA), a company developing a portfolio of first-in-class therapies for the treatment of fibrosis, announces $105 million in financing, including an $85 million Series A led by Novartis Venture Fund and Sofinnova Partners. Also participating in the financing round are Gimv, as well as Pfizer Ventures, Mission BioCapital, Pureos, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly, Ono Venture Investment and Mass General Brigham Ventures.
Fibrosis caused by inflammation or injury results in abnormal formation of scar tissue that can lead to organ failure. Fortunately, not all fibrosis leads to organ failure. To date, there is no cure for fibrosis, and current therapies are suboptimal. Mediar Therapeutics was founded on groundbreaking fibrosis research from Harvard Medical School and Mass General Brigham & Women’s Hospital. Mediar is working on a pipeline of unique factors that affect myofibroblasts, the major cell type that drives fibrosis progression.
The Series A financing will enable Mediar Therapeutics to accelerate the development of a portfolio of first-in-class antibody treatments that have unique potential to treat fibrosis at various stages of disease. Two of the programs will enter human trials by 2024.
Dr. Andreas Jurgeit, Partner Life Sciences at Gimv, who has also joined the Board of Directors of Mediar Therapeutics, commented, “Mediar is a unique combination of science, talent and the ability to address a significant unmet medical need. Fibrosis is responsible for a significant percentage of deaths in the industrialized world, and to date there is no cure or appropriate treatment. We are very pleased that Gimv is joining a strong consortium of leading global life science investors to support Mediar Therapeutics. We look forward to working closely with management, our industry partners and co-investors to achieve Mediar Therapeutics’ mission.”
Christoph Kocher, Associate at Gimv, added, “Mediar’s vision of leveraging myofibroblast biology to address the large unmet need in patients with fibrotic diseases is fully aligned with the mission of Gimv’s life science platform: to build leading companies that have a lasting impact on patients and society.”